260 CATALOGUE OF UNGULATES 



finely speckled with black, especially posteriorly ; no speckling 

 on legs, neck, shoulders, and face ; flank-zone " cinnamon," 

 thighs only slightly darker ; black markings and distribution 

 of white as in preceding race. 



Schwarz remarks that this and the two preceding forms 

 are very closely allied, aiid that more material from inter- 

 mediate localities will certainly show them to intergrade, but 

 the extremes at hand are different enough from each other to 

 deserve subspecifio rank. 



F.—Kobus kob alurse. 



Adenota kob alurfe, Heller, Smithson. Misc. Collect, vol. Ixi, no. 7, 

 p. 11, 1913. 



Typical locality Lado Enclave. 



Type in U. S. National Museum. 



Similar in colour to the next race, but smaller, approaching 

 in this respect the typical kob ; the hair is also shorter, the 

 skull is smaller and flatter, the hoofs are shorter, and the 

 white area round the eyes is very much larger, including 

 the whole orbital region, while the backs of the ears show a 

 tendency to whiteness, being in some cases uniformly buff, 

 without black tips. 



No specimen in collection. 



G.— Kobus kob loderi. 



Cobus vardoni loderi, Lydekher, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1899, p. 984, Game 



Animals of Africa, p. 215, 1908 ; Ward, Becords of Big Game, 



p. 212, 1910. 

 Cobus loderi, Rothschild, Powell-Cotton's Sporting Trip through 



Ahyssitiia, p. 467, 1902. 

 (?) Adenota pousarguesi, 0. Neumann, Sitzher. Ges. nat. Freunde, 



1905, p. 91. 

 (?) Cobus coba pousarguesi, Lydehker, Game Animals of Africa, 



p. 210, 1908. 



Typical locality u.nknowu. 



Type in collection of Sir E. G. Loder, Leonardslee, 

 Horsham, Sussex. 



Described from a skull and horns, the latter of which are 

 characterised by their stoutness and the shortness of their 

 tips, and carry seventeen ridges ; in form they are inter- 



